Letter 91: Severus rejoices in John and John's letter, then asks them to help Mitras resist false prophecy and deceit.

Severus of AntiochJohn and John the presbyters|c. 520 AD|Severus of Antioch|From Antioch, Syria|AI-assisted
John and John; Theodore the presbyter; Mitras; false prophecy; East; pastoral counsel
The letter contains a vivid story of a failed prophet who ended up begging forgiveness from those he had threatened. Source id V.11; Brooks page 325; source-facing English extracted by body markers from the Archive OCR text; source terminology repaired where required; original Syriac source-text backfill remains pending.

Severus begins with gratitude because John and John have written after a long silence. Hearing their voice after winter is more pleasant to him than spring. Flowers from the meadows bloom and fade quickly, but words shaped by the Spirit become a better garland. Their letter brought him joy first because the commemoration of Theodore the presbyter had gathered a large festival. For Severus, the memorial of holy people is not nostalgia. It trains believers to think about the resurrection, because the departure of the saints teaches the blessed life Christ has promised.

From there he turns to events in the East. He knows only what their letter also reports, yet the pain of impiety forces him to speak. His grief centers on Mitras, a man he plainly loves and respects but also thinks dangerously gullible. Mitras, wise in other ways, has allowed foolish people and false prophecies to take hold of him. Severus cannot watch that without protest. He compares his own speech to Job's: bitterness presses words out of him because silence would be cowardice.

The story he tells is almost comic, but the comedy is angry. A certain prophet threatened people with judgment and tried to draw prophecies from his own swollen vanity. When the prophecy failed, he changed roles and became a beggar before the very people he had threatened, kneeling in the road and asking them only to return to communion with him. They laughed and left him there with his prophecies. Severus uses the scene to expose the emptiness of spiritual intimidation when it is not governed by truth.

He also recounts a quieter and more painful episode. A man who had been threatened came to the church for counsel and was later struck with painful swellings. The sufferer came to Severus and asked him to touch the afflicted place. Severus wept, prayed, and did what he could, but the point of the story is not that Severus had power. It is that the church's discernment and compassion stand opposite theatrical threats. The faithful need steady help, not spiritual bullying.

The letter then widens into a plea for vigilance. Heretics and unstable teachers set traps; wise Christians must remove stones from the royal road so that no one is led aside. Severus wants John and John to help protect Mitras from people who flatter his weakness. They are to take his place if he cannot speak with Mitras himself. Their understanding can say more than Severus has written, and their nearness may succeed where distance delays him.

Severus' tone remains humble at the end. If he has misjudged the case, he asks to be taught and promises to be silent. This is not false modesty. He is fierce because he believes a friend is in danger, but he still leaves room for correction. That balance gives the letter its force. Severus does not confuse zeal with infallibility. He is ready to speak in anguish, and he is ready to be corrected if the truth requires it.

For John and John, the practical command is clear. They must use their maturity to counsel Mitras, expose false prophecy, and steady those endangered by deceit. They must not let laughter at a failed prophet become indifference to the damage such people do. Severus asks them to fill his absence with pastoral intelligence: speak more fully than he can from afar, heal the confusion, and keep the road open for people who want to walk without stumbling.

Severus is especially worried because false prophecy can imitate courage. A man who threatens others in God's name looks fearless until the prediction fails. Then the same person may turn servile and beg forgiveness, not because he loves truth, but because his performance has collapsed. Severus wants John and John to see the pattern clearly. The issue is not only one failed prediction. It is the habit of using spiritual language to control frightened people and then escaping responsibility when the threat proves empty.

Mitras matters because he is not a fool. Severus calls him wonderful and wise, which makes the danger more painful. Wise people can suffer fools when they are generous, tired, lonely, or eager for some sign that God is acting. Severus' criticism is therefore affectionate. He wants the two presbyters to protect a valuable person from the false teachers who have learned how to flatter his openness. Their counsel must be direct enough to wake him without humiliating him.

The letter also gives a glimpse of Severus' pastoral network under pressure. He cannot be everywhere. He has not yet had the opportunity to speak with Mitras himself. So he turns to John and John as trusted extensions of his care. They know the situation more closely, and they can say what he cannot yet say in person. That delegation is part of the letter's urgency: good people must not wait for the perfect messenger when a soul is already being pulled toward confusion.

Severus' final quotations from Job keep the tone from becoming arrogant. He speaks because anguish compels him, but he asks to be taught if he is wrong. That is more than a rhetorical flourish. It models the kind of correction he wants for Mitras. True spiritual authority can warn, rebuke, and expose error while still remaining answerable to truth. False prophecy cannot do that; it must win or collapse. Severus asks John and John to practice the better form of authority.

The joy of the opening and the anguish of the middle belong together. Severus can delight in a festival for Theodore and still be angry over Mitras because both responses come from the same hope: the saints teach the resurrection, and the living must not be surrendered to theatrical lies. The work of John and John is to keep that hope sane, truthful, and usable.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.

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Original text not yet available in this corpus.

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Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from modern severus brooks batch8 v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://archive.org/details/selectletterssix02seveuoft/page/n109/mode/1up

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